Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Hackney Horse Society. 1,637 likes · 62 talking about this. The aims of the Society are to maintain the Stud Book and to promote the Hackney Horse &...

  2. The first Hackney as we know the breed today is said to be The Shales Horse, foaled in 1760. During the next 50 years, the Hackney was developed as a special breed. The seas were being crossed regularly during the 1800s, by ships bearing both Hackney horses and the smaller ponies which certain breeders were selectively encouraging.

  3. The Canadian Hackney Society. 943 likes · 94 talking about this. The Canadian Hackney Society is a place to promote both the Hackney Horse and Pony.

  4. Un caballo Hackney en una competición de conducción de carruaje, con su característico paso de articulaciones delanteras elevadas. La altura del caballo Hackney varía de 14,2 manos (147 centímetros - una mano son 4 pulgadas) a 16,2 manos (168 cm) de altura. Pueden ser de cualquier color sólido, incluidos castaño, oscuro, alazán y negro.

  5. Alexander Johnston Cassatt war für die Einführung des Hackney-Ponys in den Vereinigten Staaten verantwortlich. 1878 erwarb er 239 Stella in Großbritannien und brachte sie nach Philadelphia. Im Jahr 1891 gründeten Cassatt und andere Anhänger des Hackneys die American Hackney Horse Society mit Sitz in Lexington (Kentucky).

  6. International Status: in its home country listed together with the Hackney Pony as Critical (Fewer than 300) and as Critical/Nearly extinct globally by EST. Arrived in Australia: the Nineteenth century, for example, an "excellent hackney" was advertised in Hobart in 1824. Horse repositories throughout Australia regularly sold hackneys.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hack_(horse)Hack (horse) - Wikipedia

    Hack (horse) Hack within the activity of equestrianism commonly refers to one of two things: as a verb, it describes the act of pleasure riding for light exercise, and as a breed (Hackney/hack), it is a type of horse used for riding and pulling carriages. [1] The term is sometimes used to describe certain types of exhibition or horse show ...